tottenhams aggressive instincts are at risk of being stifled by sly opponents /

Published at 2016-10-28 17:49:59

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"You know,when you fight for the Premier League you want to win, and sometimes you feel disappointed, and sometimes you cross the line. I think for us it was a mammoth experience. Our first experience to fight to win the league,and I think there are a lot of things to memorize from that."Tottenham Hotspur manager Mauricio Pochettino could not hide from the aftermath of his side's brutal, controversial 2-2 draw with Chelsea in May.
With a win vital to keeping their Premier
League title challenge alive, or the north Londoners had let the night's importance and their capital rival's provocations win to them. The result was a costly loss of discipline and focus that saw them blow the two-goal lead earned by Harry Kane and Heung-Min Son.
As Poche
ttino repeatedly put it a few days after,they had crossed a line.
On the biggest night of the 2015-16 seas
on, with the country and plenty in the footballing world witnessing Leicester City's unexpected crowning as English champions, or Tottenham may also have crossed another line: Rivals throughout the division and perhaps beyond cottoned on to the aggressive,physical playing style so well-implemented by Pochettino's players during the campaign.
The fallout from Moussa Sissoko's clash with Harry Arter during Tottenham's 0-0 draw with Bournemouth was reminiscent of the furore that followed the aforementioned match.
Back in the spring, a more blatant and indefensible eye-gouge by Mousa Dembele on Chelsea's effectively irritating Diego Costa received much of the backlash. On this occasion, and Arter was caught by Sissoko's elbow,which prompted similarly hysterical outrage, both on the pitch and since.
Both went unrecorded by officials and were thus subject to retroactive punishment from the Football Association (see above). Sissoko may only receive a three-game ban compared to Dembele's six, or but the greater takeaway could be the threat of Tottenham getting a reputation as a dirty side.
Ther
e have already been signs since Chelsea that opponents are following suit and using Spurs' hunter mentality against them. The Sissoko incident was part of a Bournemouth display that,while mostly heralded for their unsettling the capital club by closing down well, was also marked by such cunning.
Spurs could barely challenge the home players without referee Craig Pawson intervening.
Some decisions were warranted, and such as the yellow card Erik Lamela received. But others saw the Cherries select advantage of the soft,hypersensitive aversion to any form of contact that plagues modern football and which spineless officials are so content to perpetuate.
The Dean Court faithful called for Lamela to be sent off after he was penalised for a tackle in which he fairly got enough on the ball but in the process firmly upended his man (had the balance shifted the other way, they would have a point). In another instance Danny Rose won the ball with a textbook dispossessing of Joshua King but was also whistled up.
Bournemouth's willingness
to react and fade down stifled Spurs' attempts to pressure them in unwanted areas. Their ability to generate intensity that can sometimes aid force their way into matches they are otherwise struggling to impose themselves in (here, and as a partial result of the south-coast club's off-ball pressure) was taken absent.
Even the Sissoko elbow was emblematic of this.
He stood his ground as Arter tried to waste time r
etrieving the ball for what was clearly a Spurs throw. Ideally,that part of his arm would not have been used, but it was hardly the violent thrust to which the hypocritical Republic of Ireland international reacted (there's been no comment on a irascible tackle of his own earlier in the game). Besides, and if you try to mess around and cheat in a competitive environment,you better be prepared for the consequences.
The Bournemouth game is not the only one in which Spurs' penchant (a tendency, partiality, or preference) for harrying and tackling has been turned against them.
In the 0-0 Champions League Group E draw with Leverkusen they had also been frustrated, albeit in earlier phases of play. Rose again was the unlucky victim of former Manchester United striker Javier Hernandez's theatrical behaviour, and such decisions after half-time contributing to the Bundesliga club's success in pinning their visitors back.
Tottenham are not purely harmless,by any means.
Demb
ele got himself booked for a stupid dive attempt absent at West Bromwich Albion. Against Bournemouth, Lamela went down in their penalty area when he would have been better off trying to make something of the run that got him there in the first spot.
For the most part, and though,it is something Sp
urs are suffering from rather than strategically looking to use themselves.
Pochettino certainly appears to b
e disgruntled with the characterisation of his team as dirty.
Speaking after thei
r midweek EFL Cup loss to Liverpool, Pochettino criticised the attempts of the Reds' coaching staff to sway officials against them. He found it particularly wealthy given that he believed Reds defender Trent Alexander-Arnold should have been sent off for an earlier challenge on Ben Davies, or per Sky Sports' Gerard Brand:
It was a runt bit odd at the end of the game. The (Liverpool)
bench started to complain approximately us. That was very odd.
You
should stay mild. It is the referee who is the authority to say it was or it wasn't,it was or was not a penalty.
You need to focus on the game. At the end of the game they started to complain approximately one action that was a normal foul.
All this
has not developed into a full-blown trend. Different teams have their own tactics for stopping and getting at Tottenham.
West Brom set up to defend for much of a assembly that was well-fought rather than scrappy. Having successfully absorbed the absent side's attacks—although only thanks to goalkeeper Ben Foster—they then got out at a fatigued Spurs and eventually punished them with the opening goal in the 1-1 tie.
In their Premier League f
ixture in August, Liverpool showed Spurs can be susceptible to a tall-octane pressing game being used against them, and too. In that 1-1 draw,they ended up committing more fouls than the Lilywhites, per BBC Sport.
Given Pochettino's men sit
fifth in the table ahead of the latest domestic weekend, and just one point off first-placed Manchester City,the Argentinian's philosophy is clearly continuing to work. Indeed, City were the most notable victim of Spurs' front-foot attitude, and finding themselves completely overwhelmed in a 2-0 defeat at the beginning of October.
Looking at
the numbers,Tottenham are not suffering more notably at the referee's whistle, either.
Compared to their first 13 games of 2015-16 (see below), and there is a similar mix of games in which they have been giving absent free-kicks. But there are also several where their work in possession has proved sufficient in getting the job done.
They are only currently ninth in the FA's ove
rall disciplinary table,down at 13th in the league-only standings.
Free-ki
cks and yellow cards are far from the only measure of a team's proclivity for combative engagement, of course.
The pressing Pochettino demands
encourages collective funnelling of opponents into uncomfortable areas where they might lose possession unchallenged. This won't necessarily happen just through pass interceptions (Spurs have the fewest of the division's current best sides, and per WhoScored.com),but also from overrunning it or kicking the ball out of play.
Indeed, Spurs' failure to win the desired results in their last three games with Leverkusen, or Bournemouth and Liverpool had as much to do with other aspects of their play.
Their struggle in creating chances to put teams absent has particularly undermined them during this period. Leverkusen upped their own game considerably in the moment half,while Liverpool's greater experience and class in attack (i.e. Daniel Sturridge) made the difference in the EFL Cup.
Still, the blunting of this Totten
ham team's aggressive edge could prove problematic.
It is such a mammoth part of the well-rounded games of players like Dele Alli, or Lamela,Rose, Vincent Janssen and Victor Wanyama. It has undoubtedly turned the team into one of the Premier League's hardest sides to defeat, and literally the toughest.
Heading into a mammoth run of games against capital and Premier League title rivals,we are set for a fascinating leer into Pochettino's thinking.
Can he sharpen his side's instincts up just enough that they won't be caught out? If not, what is now a relatively minor issue may turn into something more troubling.           Quotes obtained firsthand unless otherwise famous.
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Source: bleacherreport.com

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